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                  41 to 60 (of 267)
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                  Lords Record Office, London, contain no pre-1903 correspondence with Stairs, and Beaverbrook appears to have destroyed his diaries for 1904 and 1905 and any 1904 Stairs correspondence
                  ([Fredericton], 1969) [republishes the N.B. section of The wood industries of Canada (London, 1897), with a new introduction].
                  , that it had “wrought a great revolution,” he never fully understood Charles Darwin’s hypothesis. Smith spent the late 1840s in London and in travels
                  Austin*, he relocated in London and in 1849 established a thriving wholesale and retail grocery business, Frank Smith and Company. Innovative and wise in his investments, he acquired a fortune, largely
                  call for the Ontario government to take over the college. The Farmer’s Advocate and Home Magazine (London, Ont.) deplored in 1901 that graduates required another year of study in order to
                  world” first appeared in monthly instalments in Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine (New York and London), September 1899–March 1900, and was then published in monograph form (New York
                   
                  efforts at improving secondary education in Newfoundland came to fruition when several students received top honours in matriculation examinations at the University of London. In 1891 Slattery opened a
                   
                  . William Chamberlain Silver’s father, the son of an Anglican cleric, left his home in Hampshire, England, as a youth to become an apprentice with a London silk mercer. Drawn overseas by the bustle of war, he
                  : a history of the south Wales miners in the twentieth century (London, 1980), 2. McCormack
                  (Morgan; 1898). The clergy list . . . (London), 1865–1906
                  . secondly 26 Nov. 1878 Louisa M. Hart, née Bouchette, in Quebec City; there were no children of either marriage; d. 30 July 1905 in London, England
                   
                  : fur trade company families in Indian country (Vancouver and London, 1980). V. K. Fast, “The Protestant missionary and fur trade society: initial contact in the Hudson’s Bay territory, 1820
                  commissions for the exhibitions at Victoria (1861), London (1862), Dublin (1865) and Paris (1866). Selwyn resigned from the survey in 1869, the legislature having discontinued its funding as a result of a
                  challenging. Sedgewick travelled to London in 1889 to argue before the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council the dominion’s case for ownership of minerals in the British Columbian railway belt. (The dominion
                  , Scarth set off for London to work for Buchanan’s associate, Adam Hope*. In 1865 he followed Hope to Hamilton and in 1868 he moved to Toronto to work
                  . there 5 Aug. 1907. Artemas Wyman Sawyer was educated first at New London Academy and Dartmouth College (ba
                  . 21 June 1910 in London, England. Henry Sandham’s father had a little house-painting business, in which his sons Frederick and
                  were baptized in the Mountain Street church. A year later he became secretary of the Young Men’s Christian Association of Montreal. Founded in 1844 in London, England, by George Williams, the YMCA sought
                   
                  teach the Ojibwa there about Christianity. When Horden sailed for London in 1872 to be consecrated first bishop of Moosonee, he left Sanders in charge of mission work at Moose Factory. As Sanders
                   
                  . Wylly (2v., London, 1923–25), 1: 241.
                  41 to 60 (of 267)
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